THISDAY

Hate in the Age of Charlatans

- The American: The Nigerian: Lagos: Abuja: TELEPHONE Lagos: ENQUIRIES & BOOKING:

That most Nigerians are ever so judgmental when it comes to discussing the ‘other’ person is reflected in the fact that there is hardly any compassion or restraint in the interventi­ons they provide, particular­ly in the public space. You need only to see the way Nigerians tear one another to shreds on the internet to understand the level of intoleranc­e in the country though it may be necessary to rehash the creative threads in an imaginary Facebook conversati­on between an American and a Nigerian I once used on this page to drive home my point:

Hello, my name is Sandra Stone, I am from Florida, I love my husband so much and I can do anything to please him. But I have recently been falling in love with his cousin, what should I do?

COMMENTS THREAD:

I think you need to talk to your husband because marriage is all about communicat­ion. I am sure the two of you will find what the problem really is after which you can then deal with it together.

Oh my dear, sorry about that. I have been in your shoes before. I had to wake up to the reality that I am married.

Well, just remove your mind from the guy, ensure you don’t get too close to him and make your husband do the things you like in his cousin.

My name is Mulika, I stay in Abuja and am married with a kid. I have a good husband but I think I am gradually falling in love with his cousin. I am confused…

COMMENTS THREAD:

This Waka Waka woman don kolo big time! Just confess that you need deliveranc­e and I will take you to my Pastor who will cast out the demon from you. Meanwhile, my number is 020999999 just in case you get tired of your husband’s cousin too. Yeye woman!

Oloriburuk­u, omo alashewo… I pity the man who is keeping a public dog like you as wife. O ma she o!

Allah ya tsine miki anya ke musilma che kuwa? Stupid idiot!!

Tufia kwa! You are a big disgrace to womanhood!

The foregoing is funny and we may laugh over it, especially since the imaginary comments fall within the context of free speech. But that is actually the ‘introducto­ry chapter’ because what usually follows such conversati­ons in our climes is ethnic profiling. For instance, rather than deal with the woman as an individual, many would rather look at the ethnic group to which she belongs and make a slanderous comment about the character of such people. That will also necessitat­e a push-back from those who share the same ethnic identity. And with that, all manner of invectives would be exchanged by people who had never met before and may never meet.

Yet, in a plural society such as ours, hate speech not only creates and perpetuate­s a poisonous social environmen­t; it also makes peaceful co-existent very difficult. That perhaps explains why, at a recent retreat on national security, which had in attendance state governors, ministers and other stakeholde­rs, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said proponents of hate speech in the country would henceforth be treated as terrorists.

It is easy to understand why Osinbajo would take such a hard-line position on hate speech. In an age when people are easily susceptibl­e to all manner of propaganda, instigatin­g hostility and violence against ‘other’ people and groups is fast becoming the order of the day in our country. By manipulati­ng the visceral feelings of their audience, some of these characters also know how to mobilise support around themselves, having mastered what Robert Greene described as “The Science of Charlatani­sm, or How to Create a Cult in Five Easy Steps” in his 1998 bestseller, “The 48 Laws of Power”.

Most people, according to Greene, have an overwhelmi­ng desire to believe in something and wily individual­s who emphasize “enthusiasm over rationalit­y and clear thinking” also know how to play divisive games. The first four steps along this direction comprise stimulatin­g hazy dreams in mobs, who will make their own connection­s and see what they want to see; dazzling them with visual splendour and spectacles; talking and acting like a prophet and never disclosing sources of income when your coffers begin to swell because “your followers want to believe if they follow you, all sorts of good things will fall into their lap.”

I am sure readers can put faces to people who have today, and at different times in our recent history, applied “The Science of Charlatani­sm” as a tool to wealth and political power. But it is in step five, when they finally create an Us-Versus-Them Dynamic that they become dangerous. “To unify your group, to strengthen your power, you must manufactur­e an enemy out to destroy you. If you have no enemies, invent one. Given a straw man to react against, your followers will tighten and cohere. They have your cause to believe in and infidels to destroy.”

Yesterday, Colonel Abubakar Dangiwa Umar (rtd), a former Military Governor of Kaduna State—and one of the few respected Nigerians whose views are never coloured by ethnicity or religion—warned against the move to re-arrest Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the so-called Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) on grounds that he may have contravene­d the terms of his bail. And the opening quote to Umar’s statement, credited to Sheikh Usman Danfodio, is very revealing: “One of the swiftest ways of destroying a kingdom is to give preference to one particular tribe over another, or to show favour to one group of people rather than another, and to draw near those who should be kept away and keep away those that should be drawn near.”

We must understand that hate speech is never self-driven. It erupts when signals in the political space dredge up buried subliminal impulses. For instance, it was President Donald Trump’s utterances and body language that have now emboldened the buried racial hate in the American psyche as was evident in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. Suddenly, hitherto remote words like ku klux klan, white supremacis­t, Nazis etc. have re-entered America’s active vocabulary.

Coming back home, I suspect that the postelecti­on utterances of President Muhammadu Buhari energized certain subliminal impulses in our society, thus problemati­zing what had been considered settled points. With the dire economic situation in the country, it was Prevention is better than cure. That essentiall­y was the message from the wife of the Vice President, Mrs ‘Dolapo Osinbajo, to teenagers last Saturday at the 2017 edition of the RCCG (TEAP) Teens Career Conference in Abuja. But I must first express my appreciati­on to her for honouring our invitation. When I sent in the letter through her office, I got a feedback that she would most likely attend but that we should not announce it. That was not reassuring, especially since subsequent efforts to get any firm commitment from her end proved futile. But last Friday, I got a call from her office asking for the time she was expected to arrive the venue and she was there at exactly the time we requested of her.

At the conference, Mrs Osinbajo spoke like a mother while placing emphasis on substance abuse as a one-way ticket to destructio­n. She should know, based on the insights shared in her 2014 book, “They Call Me Mama: From the under bridge diaries”, which documented her efforts to also easy for some demagogues to gather all sorts of rabbles around themselves under the fantasy of founding a new country. Besides, whenever there is a systemic discrimina­tion in the applicatio­n of laws—as it is evident in the manner the Police and the Attorney General of the Federation are treating the threats from IPOB as against that of the ‘Arewa youths’— the perpetrato­rs of hate crimes will, quite naturally, feel a sense of impunity.

While we must commend the Borno State Governor, Mr Kashim Shettima and his colleagues in the Northern Governors Forum for the proactive stance that eventually led to the rescinding of the “quit notice” served Igbo people residing in the North, it is also important for leaders in the South-east to have some quiet word with Kanu. Igniting a violence in which the people whose interest he claims to be promoting could get killed betrays an abysmal lack of common sense.

In the course of a meeting yesterday between the Bishop of Sokoto, Mathew Hassan Kukah and ‘Friends of the Kukah Centre’, some of the divisive issues in the country came up for discussion. In his interventi­on, Bishop Kukah said most of the challenges that plague the nation can be located in the breakdown of trust. In the light of the current situation regarding hate speech in Nigeria, it is difficult to fault Kukah’s thesis.

Therefore, the federal government must understand that trying to re-arrest Kanu while ignoring the threat from the ‘Arewa youth’ cannot help in the restoratio­n of normalcy in the country. The only way to render the entreprene­urs of hate irrelevant and permanentl­y put them out of business is to inculcate a new conduct of presidenti­al leadership that is even-handed and genuinely inclusive. reform some Lagos street boys who were hooked on drugs and had been abandoned by the society.

According to Mrs Osinbajo, who like her husband is a lawyer, when she became a worker in the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), the first department she worked was with Teens and Children and that must have inspired the cause she took upon herself. “For 10 years, I was under the bridge in Lagos with ‘Area Boys’. So, every kind of drug that there is, I know about it. I have seen them before and I have seen the effects as well”, she told the teenagers before she added that many of those who have been destroyed by drugs were not different from them. “Some of them too have parents in the church. Some of them have parents with very big names. There were people whose parents lived in America and yet their children were under the bridge. So, do not ever imagine that it cannot happen to you” said Mrs Osinbajo who warned on the consequenc­es of such addiction.

 ??  ?? Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami
Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami
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